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G4S Latvia files insolvency claim against KVV Liepajas Metalurgs

BC, Riga, 21.06.2016.Print version
An insolvency claim has been filed against financially troubled KVV Liepajas Metalurgs metallurgical company with the court in Liepaja, south-western Latvia, reports LETA, according to the information published on the website of the Insolvency Administration.

The insolvency claim had been filed by G4S Latvia security company, and the insolvency proceeding was opened on June 17.

 

The court will hear the insolvency claim against KVV Liepajas Metalurgs at 10 a.m. on July 1, LETA was told at the Liepajas court.

 

The Latvian government on May 17 and May 24 reviewed the report prepared by the Latvian Privatization Agency (LPA) and FeLM, a company established by the LPA to which the State Treasury will assign its claim against KVV Liepajas Metalurgs, in cooperation with the economics and finance ministries. It was concluded that the debt restructuring proposals by KVV Group, the Ukrainian owners of KVV Liepajas Metalurgs, are inacceptable and other solutions have to be found for revival of the steel plant.

 

The proposals by KVV Group include significant participation of the Latvian state in the metallurgical company without handing over control over the company, tax discounts and other measures that might be interpreted as unlawful state aid.

 

Ukraine's KVV Group announced in late March it had been forced to take a decision on the conservation of KVV Liepajas Metalurgs steel plant because the negative factors hampering the company's operations - the crisis in the global metal industry, the company's debts to secured creditors and the Latvian government's reluctance to provide assistance to the industry – were persisting.

 

Liepajas Metalurgs metallurgical plant based in the Liepaja port city in south-western Latvia was declared insolvent after it failed to repay a state-guaranteed loan to an Italian bank. The government sold the plant to Ukrainian investors, KVV Group, in late 2014. Liepajas Metalurgs was renamed KVV Liepajas Metalurgs and officially re-opened on March 6, 2015, but soon started having problems again. The company has had difficulties paying its electricity bills and wages to workers. It has also missed the deadline for a EUR 2.7 million payment to the Latvian state, an installment for purchase of the steel plant.

 

Ukraine’s KVV Group is supposed to pay for the plant EUR 107 million in several installments over the next 10 years.






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